RESUMEN
In this contribution, the unique and unprecedented stereochemical phenomenon of an aldoxime dehydratase-catalyzed enantioselective dehydration of racemic E- and Z-aldoximes with selective formation of both enantiomeric forms of a chiral nitrile is rationalized by means of molecular modelling, comprising in silico mutations and docking studies. This theoretical investigation gave detailed insight into why with the same enzyme the use of racemic E- and Z-aldoximes leads to opposite forms of the chiral nitrile. The calculated mutants with a larger or smaller cavity in the active site were then prepared and used in biotransformations, showing the theoretically predicted decrease and increase of the enantioselectivities in these nitrile syntheses. This validated model also enabled the rational design of mutants with a smaller cavity, which gave superior enantioselectivities compared to the known wild-type enzyme, with excellent E-values of up to E>200 when the mutant OxdRE-Leu145Phe was utilized.
Asunto(s)
Hidroliasas/metabolismo , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Nitrilos/metabolismo , Hidroliasas/química , Estructura Molecular , Nitrilos/química , EstereoisomerismoRESUMEN
Aldoxime dehydratases (Oxds) are a unique class of enzymes, which catalyzes the dehydration of aldoximes to nitriles in an aqueous environment. Recently, they gained attention as a catalyst for a green and cyanide-free alternative to established nitrile syntheses, which often require the use of toxic cyanides and harsh reaction conditions. Up to now only thirteen aldoxime dehydratases have been discovered and biochemically characterized. This raised the interest for identifying further Oxds with, e.g., complementary properties in terms of substrate scope. In this study, 16 novel genes, presumably encoding aldoxime dehydratases, were selected by using a commercially available 3DM database based on OxdB, an Oxd from Bacillus sp. OxB-1. Out of 16 proteins, six enzymes with aldoxime dehydratases activity were identified, which differ in their substrate scope and activity. While some novel Oxds showed better performance for aliphatic substrate such as n-octanaloxime compared to the well characterized OxdRE from Rhodococcus sp. N-771, some showed activity for aromatic aldoximes, leading to an overall high usability of these enzymes in organic chemistry. The applicability for organic synthesis was underlined by converting 100 mM n-octanaloxime at a 10 mL scale within 5 h with the novel aldoxime dehydratase OxdHR as whole-cell catalyst (33 mgbww/mL).